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Home (nightclub chain)

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The Home chain of nightclubs were initially started at the height of popularity of house music. The chain was originally called "Jacobs" until being bought out in 2015. The clubs are notorious for its "anti mobile phones" policy, where phones are confiscated before entrance, and when people breach this rule, a form of "punishment" is implemented. The two clubs at the time were two of the largest nightclubs in their respective countries, and were of a number of dance music enterprises operated by the one company, including various other smaller clubs and the outdoor music festival Homelands.

Background

At its peak, the Home Nightclub chain included two large clubs in Sydney and London, as well as hosting the outdoor Homelands dance music festival. The Nightclub chain was the dream of Ron Mcculloch and Big Beats (Inc) who had intended for a broader worldwide chain of clubs including having advanced plans for a New York club, as well as plans for clubs in Singapore and Buenos Aires and outdoor events held in various part of the world. The club is notorious for its no drinks policy, which comes with unfortunate "punishments" for people who fail to follow the rules. d.[1] The idea of the clubs was that they would beam performances of DJs to each other, and have International events by transmission. The two clubs in Sydney and London were among the biggest Dance music clubs in their respected countries.

Club openings

The Sydney Club was the first to open on 13 November 1998, in Cockle Bay, Darling Harbour.[1] It was purposely built as a nightclub, and holding 2000 people, it is one of Australia’s biggest regular house music venues. The interior was designed by Ron McCulloch, and it features a number of different spaces. The main dancefloor holds 700 people.[1] It cost A$10 million to build.[2]

The London Home Club (see full article Home (nightclub)) was a "superclub" in the middle of London on Leicester Square, opened in 1998. It had eight levels, and cost £8.5m to build, after hard negotiations over building at the Leicester Square site.[3][4]

Closure of London Home and the collapse of Big Beat

However, Home in London was shut by police only 2 years after its opening. It had its licence revoked by police because of evidence of obvious drug dealing in the premises, flagged by an undercover police operation which discovered "open and serious Class A drug dealing and usage".[5] At this stage, Home London was owned by Big Beats Pubs and Club Empire, it being jointly owned by Mr McCulloch, George Swanson (the former Whitbread director), and Royal Bank Development Capital.[6]

The closing of Home London affected the Big Beats company, which then went into receivership. While the licence was reinstated, it was too late for Big Beat. Big Beat’s Home nightclubs assets were initially contracted by the receiver, KPMG, to be run by the Mean Fiddler business.[7] The London club was then purchased for GBP20 million by the Mean Fiddler business, owned by John Vincent Power.[8] However, Ron McCulloch, from Big Beat, then purchased the Sydney Home Club himself and moved to Australia [9][10]

Continuation of Sydney Home

Sydney Home continued (and continues to this day). In the early 2000s it incorporated the successful Pitt Street club Sublime in the late 90's, run by Simon Page. Simon brought the three nights that were being run at Sublime, Beatfix, Cargo and Voodoo and moved its DJs (including Peewee Ferris, Nik Fish, Craig Obey, Bexta and Kate Monroe) into Home's Friday night. The Friday Sublime night has continued to run successfully since that time. After some arising family issues, Simon sold his interest to McCulloch. In 2005, Ron McCulloch sold the club back to Simon page for roughly what he had purchased it for.[11] With the downturn from the peak of interest in dancemusic, and the return of an interest in rock, Sydney Home also expanded into rock music in 2006, hosting bands on Saturday nights, then followed by DJs.[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Scatena, Dino "Night fever" Daily Telegraph 13 November 1998 p 11
  2. ^ McDougall, Liam "No place like Home for King of Clubs". 1 April 2001 Scotland on Sunday p 8
  3. ^ Askew, Kate (28 August 2001). "Busted Scot Buys Home". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 25.
  4. ^ McDougall, Liam (1 April 2001). "No place like Home for King of Clubs". Scotland on Sunday. p. 8.
  5. ^ "Home Nightclub Shut By Police" BBC Entertainment http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/1251385.stm
  6. ^ Tinning, William "Beat goes off as nightclub group folds." The Herald 12 April 2001 p 10.
  7. ^ Susie Mesure "Big Beat venues go to Mean Fiddler". The Independent - London 21 August 2001
  8. ^ "Mr John Vincent Power". DueDil.
  9. ^ Askew, Kate "Busted Scot Buys Home" Sydney Morning Herald 28 August 2001 P 25
  10. ^ War, Sharon and Davidson, Gina "Nightclub tycoon beats a retreat" 19 August 2001 Scotland on Sunday p 3
  11. ^ "Home Nightclub, Turning a New Page" http://www.inthemix.com.au/features/22172/Home_Nightclub_Turning_a_new_Page
  12. ^ Creagh, Sunanda "If this house is rockin" The Sydney Morning Herald 5 May 2006 SMH p 12